Wolff Mark S, Hill Rachel, Wilson-Genderson Maureen, Hirsch Stuart, Dasanayake Ananda P
Department of Cariology, New York University College of Dentistry, New York, N.Y., USA.
Caries Res. 2016;50 Suppl 1:68-77. doi: 10.1159/000439058. Epub 2016 Apr 22.
This paper describes an innovative public health intervention, called 'Smile Grenada', targeting the oral health of children in Grenada utilizing the resources of a US dental school, several oral health care companies, local governmental and public health authorities, and Grenadian school personnel.
Preintervention visual/tactile caries examinations were collected from 1,092 schoolchildren (mean age 9.9 years, standard deviation, SD = 3.7) in 2010. The intervention included: (1) classroom-based toothbrushing with fluoridated toothpaste, (2) fluoride varnish applied by trained dental students, teachers and local providers 3 times a year and (3) glass ionomer sealants placed on first permanent molars in children aged 6-8 years. Postintervention data were collected in May, 2013 (n = 2,301, mean age 9.8 years, SD = 3.7). Decayed and demineralized surfaces were examined for the whole sample and decay/demineralization and sealant retention on 6-year molars were examined separately (ages 6-8 in 2013 cohort).
The number of decayed/demineralized surfaces declined across all age groups. The average number of decayed surfaces dropped from 9 at baseline to just over 6 (F1, 3,393 = 69.8, p < 0.0001) and the average number of demineralized surfaces dropped from 6 to less than 2 (1.8 surfaces; F1, 3,393 = 819.0, p < 0.0001). For children aged 6-8 years, there were statistically significantly fewer decayed surfaces (t1, 2,086 = 12.40, p < 0.0001; mean baseline 0.93, SD = 1.75; mean follow-up 0.23, SD = 0.83) and demineralized surfaces (t1, 2,086 = 19.7, p < 0.0001; mean baseline 2.11, SD = 2.74; mean follow-up 0.50, SD = 0.97) on 6-year molars. The Smile Grenada program successfully demonstrated a locally sustainable model for improving oral health in children in a developing country.
本文描述了一项名为“格林纳达微笑”的创新性公共卫生干预措施,该措施利用美国一所牙科学院、几家口腔保健公司、当地政府和公共卫生当局以及格林纳达学校工作人员的资源,针对格林纳达儿童的口腔健康问题。
2010年从1092名学童(平均年龄9.9岁,标准差SD = 3.7)中收集干预前的视觉/触觉龋齿检查数据。干预措施包括:(1)在课堂上使用含氟牙膏刷牙;(2)由经过培训的牙科学生、教师和当地医护人员每年3次涂抹氟化物 varnish;(3)为6至8岁儿童的第一恒磨牙放置玻璃离子窝沟封闭剂。2013年5月收集干预后的数据(n = 2301,平均年龄9.8岁,SD = 3.7)。对整个样本检查龋坏和脱矿表面,并分别检查6岁磨牙的龋坏/脱矿情况和窝沟封闭剂的保留情况(2013年队列中6至8岁儿童)。
所有年龄组的龋坏/脱矿表面数量均有所下降。龋坏表面的平均数量从基线时的9个降至略高于6个(F1, 3,393 = 69.8,p < 0.0001),脱矿表面的平均数量从6个降至少于2个(1.8个表面;F1, 3,393 = 819.0,p < 0.0001)。对于6至8岁的儿童,6岁磨牙上的龋坏表面(t1, 2,086 = 12.40,p < 0.0001;平均基线0.93,SD = 1.75;平均随访0.23,SD = 0.83)和脱矿表面(t1, 2,086 = 19.7,p < 0.0001;平均基线2.11,SD = 2.74;平均随访0.50,SD = 0.97)在统计学上显著减少。“格林纳达微笑”项目成功展示了一种在发展中国家改善儿童口腔健康的当地可持续模式。